Clinical Characteristics, Diagnosis and Short-Term Outcomes of COVID-19–Associated Acute Myocarditis in China
ESC Heart Failure2024Vol. 12(1), pp. 338–352
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Huihui Liu, Ping Zhou, Yan Huang, Sulan Yan, Lei Zhou, Chuanyu Gao, Lian Wang, Jianjun Tang, Qiong Zhou, Xinqing Li, Xiaofeng Zhuang, Mei Zhai, Liyan Huang, Xuemei Zhao, Barry Greenberg, David H. Hsi, Yuhui Zhang, Jian Zhang
Abstract
The majority of COVID-19-associated AM occurred within 2 weeks of Omicron variant infection. Fulminant myocarditis complicated by hemodynamic instability requiring temporary mechanical circulatory support was not uncommon. However, short-term outcome was generally good and most AM patients fully recovered.
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